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Thinking about Design: Critical Theory of Technology and the Design ProcessIn Pieter E. Vermaas, Peter Kroes, Andrew Light & Steven A. Moore (eds.), Philosophy and Design: From Engineering to Architecture, Springer. pp. 105. 2007.
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29Aesthetics as Social Theory: Introduction to Feher's "Is the Novel Problematic?"Télos 1973 (15): 41-46. 1973.
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86Modernity, Technology and the Forms of RationalityPhilosophy Compass 6 (12): 865-873. 2011.Modern societies are shaped to a significant extent by socially rational institutions, arrangements, and technologies. A purely functional understanding of these rationalized structures eliminates the element of meaning from social life. Ellul, Heidegger and the Frankfurt School focused on this impoverishment and associate it with the spread of technology. But recent technology studies offer a different perspective which can be joined to the formulation of the social critique in the writings of …Read more
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205Ten Paradoxes of TechnologyTechné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 14 (1): 3-15. 2010.Though we may be competent at using many technologies, most of what we think we know about technology in general is false. Our error stems from the everyday conception of things as separate from each other and from us. In reality technologies belong to an interconnected network the nodes of which cannot exist independently qua technologies. What is more we tend to see technologies as quasi-natural objects, but they are just as much social as natural, just as much determined by the meanings we gi…Read more
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Heidegger and Marcuse: The Catastrophe and Redemption of HistoryHuman Studies 28 (3): 335-352. 2005.
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265Technology and the Politics of Knowledge (edited book)Indiana University Press. 1995."This fine collection of essays from a diverse group of authors expounding on a wide variety of subjects presents a generous sampling of the new philosophy of technology." —Choice "... informative, original, and provocative.... Many of the writers are major players in defining the contested political terrain of cultural, science, and technology studies as well as critical theory and Heidegger studies." —Gerald Doppelt
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344Experience and culture: Nishida's path "to the things themselves"Philosophy East and West 49 (1): 28-44. 1999.The word "experience" refers to at least four different concepts: empirical experience, lived experience, experience as Bildung, and the domain of pure consciousness prior to the division of subject and object. All these concepts of experience are at work in the thought of Nishida Kitarō, where they take on a specific historical and political character in response to the situation of Japan in the world system
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81Chapter 12: A Neo-Marxist CritiqueTechné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 10 (2): 112-122. 2006.
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The Essential Marcuse: Selected Writings of Philosopher and Social Critic Herbert MarcuseHuman Studies 31 (2): 233-239. 2008.
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148The technocracy thesis revisited: On the critique of powerInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 37 (1). 1994.No abstract
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107Lukács, Marx, and the sources of critical theoryOxford University Press. 1981.This acclaimed book is the first comparative evaluation of two primary sources of the Western Marxist tradition: Marx's Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts and History and Class Consciousness by Georg Luk'acs. Andrew Feenberg offers a new interpretation of the theories of alienation and reification as the basis of a Marxist approach to the cultural contradictions of contemporary society.
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140The Mediation is the MessageTechné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 17 (1): 7-24. 2013.Critical theory of technology brings technology studies to bear on the social theory of rationality. This paper discusses this connection through a reconsideration of the contribution of the Frankfurt School to our understanding of what I call the paradox of rationality, the fact that the promise of the Enlightenment has been disappointed as advances in scientific and technical knowledge have led to more and more catastrophic consequences. The challenge for critical theory is to understand this …Read more
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Heidegger and Marcuse : The catastrophe and redemption of technologyIn John Abromeit & W. Mark Cobb (eds.), Herbert Marcuse: A Critical Reader, Routledge. 2003.First published in 2005. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company
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201Subversive rationalization: Technology, power, and democracyInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 35 (3). 1992.This paper argues, against technological and economic determinism, that the dominant model of industrial society is politically contingent. The idea that technical decisions are significantly constrained by ?rationality? ? either technical or economic ? is shown to be groundless. Constructivist and hermeneutic approaches to technology show that modern societies are inherently available for a different type of development in a different cultural framework. It is possible that, in the future, thos…Read more
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Reification and the Antinomies of Socialist ThoughtTelos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 10 (n/a): 93. 1971.
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48Beyond the HypeFoundations of Science 22 (2): 381-383. 2017.In this reply I discuss Ellen Rose’s observations on online education as she has practiced it and Evan Selinger’s concerns about the introduction of big data in the university. Both authors are in agreement that neo-liberalism is restructuring the university, but add new considerations to the argument.
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191‘Ed Tech in Reverse’: Information technologies and the cognitive revolutionEducational Philosophy and Theory 39 (7). 2007.As we rapidly approach the 50th year of the much‐celebrated ‘cognitive revolution’, it is worth reflecting on its widespread impact on individual disciplines and areas of multidisciplinary endeavour. Of specific concern in this paper is the example of the influence of cognitivism's equation of mind and computer in education. Within education, this paper focuses on a particular area of concern to which both mind and computer are simultaneously central: educational technology. It examines the prof…Read more
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Aesthetics as Social Theory: Introduction to Fehér's "Is the Novel Problematic?"Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 15 (n/a): 41. 1973.
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New Grounds for Revolution, The Early Marx in a Lukácsian PerspectivePhilosophical Forum 8 (2): 186. 1976.
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66The Politics of MeaningRadical Philosophy Review 19 (1): 85-110. 2016.In One-Dimensional Man, Marcuse synthesized a wide range of ideas from the early Lukács, Husserl, Heidegger, and his colleagues, Horkheimer and Adorno. This synthesis is the culmination of the tradition of radical modernity critique that rose to prominence in the 1960s, providing the ideological basis for the New Left and its successor movements such as feminism and environmentalism. I develop an approach to this tradition in terms of the relation of function to meaning as it is reflected in the…Read more
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48Introduction to the Kosik-Sartre ExchangeTelos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1975 (25): 192-193. 1975.
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3The Commoner-Ehrlich Debate: Environmentalism and the Politics of SurvivalIn David Macauley (ed.), Minding nature: the philosophers of ecology, Guilford Press. 1996.
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98Fracchia and Burkett on Tailism and the DialecticHistorical Materialism 23 (2): 228-238. 2015.This commentary addresses criticism of Lukács’s early book Tailism and the Dialectic: A Defence of History and Class Consciousness. Two critiques published in Historical Materialism are analysed and alternative interpretations of Lukács’s theory developed. The commentary focuses on Lukács’s theories of class consciousness and his ideas on the social construction of nature.
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107Constructivism and technology critique: Replies to criticsInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 43 (2). 2000.1. Thomson's critique: Despite the efforts of his followers to show that Heidegger had a progressive theory of technology, his work is clouded by nostalgia. His positive contribution is a fragmentary opening toward a phenomenology of daily technical practice, which I use to develop de Certeau's distinction between the strategic control of technical systems and their tactical usage by subordinates. Heidegger himself made no such application of his own phenomenological approach. 2. Stump's critiqu…Read more
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185Peter-Paul Verbeek: Review of What Things Do: The Pennsylvania State University Press, ISBN 0-271-02540-9Human Studies 32 (2): 225-228. 2009.
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Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Computing and Information |
| Continental Philosophy |